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GOTHENBURG

There are now more than 600,000 Gothenburgers living in Gothenburg

Sweden's second-largest city is now home to more than 600,000 people, new data shows.

There are now more than 600,000 Gothenburgers living in Gothenburg
Gothenburg is growing faster than Stockholm. Photo: Adam Ihse/TT

The western city of Gothenburg grew by more than 3,700 people in 2023, passing the 600,000 people milestone in May, according to number-crunchers Statistics Sweden’s latest figures.

Its population has grown by almost 13 percent in the past decade, a faster growth rate than Stockholm’s ten percent but not as fast as Sweden’s third biggest city, Malmö, at 15 percent.

Around 360,000 people live in Malmö, so it’s still not close to overtaking Gothenburg.

Gothenburg, a city known for its industrial port, seafood, football and a lot of men called Glenn, is celebrating its 400th anniversary this year (two years after its actual anniversary, with the festivities postponed due to the pandemic).

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Uppsala, Nacka and Malmö are the three municipalities that have grown the fastest in the past ten years.

The university town of Uppsala has grown by almost 19 percent since 2013, whereas Nacka – a popular commuter suburb for people working in Stockholm – has grown by almost 17 percent.

Nacka is also the municipality that’s seen the fastest population increase in the past two decades, with a 42 percent growth sending it from Sweden’s 21st biggest municipality to the 15th biggest.

Sundsvall on the east coast, some four hours north of Stockholm by car or train and home to Mid-Sweden University, is bottom of the growth table in the past two decades, at barely seven percent.

In May, Sweden also got a new smallest municipality, as Bjurholm passed Dorotea.

A total of 2,377 people were registered as living in Dorotea, a remote town some 200 kilometres west of Umeå, in May. Bjurholm, about 60 kilometres west of Umeå, had one more resident.

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STATISTICS

More than one in ten foreigners in Sweden don’t have a close friend

Hundreds of thousands of people in Sweden don't have a close friend, a new survey by national number crunchers Statistics Sweden shows.

More than one in ten foreigners in Sweden don't have a close friend

“It’s statistically proven that between 610,000 and 720,000 people aged 16 and above don’t have a close friend. That corresponds to seven to eight percent of the population at that age,” said Statistics Sweden analyst Thomas Helgeson in a statement.

It’s more than twice as common for foreign-born people not to have a close friend.

Around 13 percent of Sweden’s foreign-born population don’t have a close friend, compared to six percent of native-born Swedes (the figure is roughly the same for the entire group of people born in Sweden, regardless of whether they have foreign or Swedish parents).

There’s a gap between the sexes too. Nine percent of men and six percent of women don’t have a close friend.

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There’s a similar gender gap among foreign-born residents in Sweden, of whom more than 15 percent of men said they don’t have a close friend, compared to almost 11 percent of women.

And finally, the more highly educated people are, the greater the chance of close friendship.

More than 12 percent of people without a Swedish high school diploma said they lacked a close friend, compared to just over five percent of those with a university degree of at least three years.

Have you managed to find friendship in Sweden? We’d like to hear about your experiences. Please fill out the survey below – we may use your answers in a future article on The Local. If the survey doesn’t appear for you, click this link.

 

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